Word: otto
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...Harper's, Chairman John Cowles Jr. and Publisher William Blair have examined a list of nearly 100 names in the search for a successor. They talked to about 25 men, including several well known to the journalism fraternity: Paris Review Editor George Plimpton, former Saturday Evening Post Editor Otto Friedrich, onetime Newsday Publisher Bill Moyers, Columnist Tom Wicker, and London Bureau Chief Anthony Lewis of the New York Times. Last week Cowles and Blair finally decided on a dark horse: TIME Senior Editor Robert B. Shnayerson...
...OTTO ECKSTEIN, Harvard professor and former member of the Council of Economic Advisers. DAVID GROVE, vice president and chief economist...
...Otto Kerner, LL.D., judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals, chairman of the 1968 National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders...
...remarkable new instrument is the result of an almost singlehanded campaign by the 60-year-old head of Bonn University's Institute of Radio Astronomy. Trying to restore some of Germany's prewar scientific luster, Professor Otto Hachenberg personally supervised the design, persuaded the Volkswagen foundation to pay most of the cost ($9 million), and nagged the builders to complete the complicated job from blueprints to operation in a short 3½ years...
Allwood's experience points up the major difference between European and American medicine. Ever since Chancellor Otto von Bismarck initiated the first such plan for German workers in 1883, national health programs have been an important aspect of the welfare state. The Swedes have had a national health system since 1955, the Norwegians since 1956; Britain adopted its national health scheme in 1948. Indeed, among the world's major industrial nations, only the U.S. has thus far failed to devise some kind of national program that either provides or subsidizes comprehensive health care...